Monday, January 31, 2011

A Late Christmas Story



I haven't told our Christmas story yet.

It was a wonderful wonderful time with both our families. My family got together for Christmas Eve and Christmas night. Matt and I spent Christmas morning at my sister Carolyn's, and since our family has a tradition of getting up at what some people consider a ridiculously early time, we were able to have Christmas with them and then make it up to Logan to experience Christmas morning all over again with Matt's family.

We spent most of our Christmas vacation with my sister and her cute family in Salt Lake.


What more could you want from Santa?



While Santa knows some things I like, ultimately it was Matt who knew the best gift.



We drove up to Logan in time to have Christmas morning all over again.

It was so much fun to spend it at Matt's grandma's home. We had a huge breakfast, lots of games, and nerf darts.

Did we mention that after 2 1/2 years of marriage we finally got a TV. Thanks in part to Matt's parents (thank you!). It's been a nice addition and hasn't taken over our life. It's perfect.

Snowshoeing at Donut Falls up Big Cottonwood Canyon in Salt Lake City

Matt crawling out of the entrance to a cave that opens up into a large room. There's a hole in the top that water flows down through, hence Donut Falls.

This is one of the reasons why I miss Utah! For you Ohioans, although you may not be able to tell, we are at almost 11,000 feet in elevation up Brighton.

We spent lots of wonderful time on Christmas Eve and Christmas night with my family.

How can you say no to them? Look at their cheeks.

Matt used his ingenious engineering skills to promote my brother-in-law's ornaments from scary to truly horrific, thanks to the snowman's jimmy-rigged glowing eyes.
Matt always makes me so proud.

I think my favorite present this season was this.
My new niece Olivia was worth every penny of the trip.


Sunday, January 30, 2011

Take a Blog Reader to Work Day


At one time or another most of you, my loyal readership, have had questions about what the life of others is like, such as: "What would it be like to be Spiderman?" "What would it be like to be an astronaut and repair the Hubble telescope?" "What would it be like to be that guy who operates the wrecking ball?" (Ok, so maybe not everyone fantasizes about being an astronaut.) But many have probably wondered, What is the life of a Computational Fluid Dynamacist like? Well you're in luck because recently at work I've a had a little spare time to work on some promotional things that will soon be on our new website. And since they will be on our website, I can share them (unlike most of the stuff we do which can't be shared with anyone.) The cool stuff is at the end.

So here it is. Most of my day is spent staring at this:
If you aren't familiar with this, it's probably a good thing because it means you also don't think math jokes are funny and also have good social skills/personal hygiene. This is a Linux command prompt. Just imagine there were no pictures or buttons on your computer and you had to type everything you want your computer to do. As bad as it sounds, it actually makes life much easier.

First we get 3D models all tidied up and ready for simulation. Then, we setup programs that simulate air blowing over or through stuff. Could be a building, could be a person, but usually it's a car of some sort. Then we look at the results and tell people what they mean. After that we make graphs of things and look at pictures of the air to see what is going on. Usually we tweak their designs somehow to make them better and run them again. Then we start the process over again and keep going in this loop until someone says stop.

Most of our simulations are run on our big computing boxes at the office which are essentially 24 really fast computers all running together which is 1 tera-flop of power. 1 tera flop is 1 trillion calculations per second. Most of our simulations take about 10 hours to solve. The numbers get pretty incomprehensible pretty fast. To give an idea of where all this power is going, essentially what is happening is the computer is solving a system of equations. If anyone remembers their algebra, that is like solving:

x + 2 = y
y+1 = x

You have to solve both equations at the same time to get an answer. Each simulation has about 50 million data points and each data point has six equations. These are usually solved about 3000 times. Anyway, it's lots of really crazy math that the computers do for us.

Anyway, since that part is usually not very exciting for most people, here are some shots that are mostly just eye-candy, but still cool. This particular simulation took a week to run.

This shot is slices through the air of the air pressure around the car. (Usually we don't color it to look like fire, but it makes a cool picture)


This is a picture of the car's wake. It's the layer of air that separates negative pressure air from positive pressure. Negative pressure is usually bad because it's suction and slows the car down. The wing on top is colored by air speed moving over its surface.


This is a picture of the air as it hits the wing of the car with what are called streamlines. It basically shows where the air goes. The streamlines are colored by their speed. The big circles are what's called a vortex.


This is a video that's pretty cool in hi-def. It shows the wake of the car changing over time. There's lots of turbulence.